> No the float rule is to avoid having to buy so much stock compared to the available stock that it would create irrational prices
Correct.
> this is probably going to happen with those IPOs
Not due to any index-following investor.
> SP500 can decide absolutely whatever they want
Yup, S&P 500 is a committee-based index.
> one of those instances in which they changed the rules in a way that made no clear sense and they will be remembered for that
S&P never changed the S&P 500's rules.
NASDAQ 100 did. But from what I can tell, that was a brilliant piece of marketing. Nobody talked about them before. (QQQQ doesn't appear to have gained or lost net assets in that time, which isn't unexpected, it's a volatile fund.)